By: Jonathan M. Katz - Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Haiti's president has lowered
rice prices and the Senate has sacked the prime
minister. But hungry Haitians who rioted over food
prices still want more.
"Aristide or death! Aristide or death!" young men in
sunglasses and low-slung ballcaps chant outside
parliament.
That's right, Jean-Bertrand Aristide — the slum
priest-turned-president who needed a U.S. intervention
to restore him to power in 1994, and who accuses
Washington of kidnapping him into exile a decade later
as the country descended into political chaos.
The clamor for Aristide's return was deafening during
last week's unrest over skyrocketing food prices that
left at least seven people dead, hundreds injured and
Prime Minister Jacques Edouard Alexis out of a job.
Some protesters vowed to press on until they unseat
President Rene Preval, a former Aristide ally.
Experts say it is unlikely that Aristide engineered
the protests from exile in South Africa. But people
living in Port-au-Prince slums say workers for a
prominent Aristide loyalist went door-to-door drumming
up support for the peaceful protests, some of which
spiraled into violence as criminal gangs seized the
opportunity to loot stores.
Either way, Aristide's return has become a key demand
on the streets after entire slums rallied for the
former president and protesters carried tree branches
they said signified their support for his Famni
Lavalas party.
"If there were an election in Haiti, Aristide would
win," said Mario Jeanty, a Haitian who lives in New
York. "There's no one who can beat him."
Aristide's smiling, bespectacled face is everywhere in
the poor areas of Port-au-Prince, from paintings sold
on roadsides to photographs pasted onto cell phones.
Blocks from the presidential palace, graffiti
declares: "King Aristide will return" and "Down with
Preval, long live Aristide."
"Whether or not one likes Aristide, he remains a force
in this country because the masses remain very
attached to him," said Patrick Elie, who has served as
an adviser to both Aristide and now Preval.
In speeches from South Africa, Aristide has hinted at
returning, but said he merely wants to be a teacher.
He has said his possibilities depend on Preval, who
served as his prime minister.
Preval won the 2006 elections with the support of
voters who believed he would bring Aristide home. But
he has not called publicly for Aristide's return, and
the men's current relationship is unclear.
Jean-Robert Lafortune, chairman of the Haitian
American Grassroots Coalition in Miami, said the fact
that Aristide hasn't made a statement on the food
crisis could be a tacit indication of support for
Preval.
"Once, Aristide called Preval his twin brother,"
Lafortune said. "We don't know if that sentiment has
changed."
Aristide generally keeps a low profile, living with
his wife Mildred and their two daughters in a
government villa in Pretoria, a garden city of
government headquarters and embassy residences.
South African officials say he spends his time
researching Caribbean history and studying Zulu, a
local language. He penned a comparative linguistic
study of Zulu and Haitian Creole, as well as a paper
on the theology of love.
A miraculous Aristide comeback would not be
unprecedented. Aristide became popular as a priest in
the slum of La Saline, and was elected president in
1990. Ousted in a military coup the following year,
U.S. troops restored him to the presidential palace in
1994.
After stepping down, he was re-elected in 2000 but was
ousted again in a bloody 2004 rebellion amid charges
that he broke promises to help the poor, allowed
drug-fueled corruption and masterminded assaults on
opponents.
Some of Aristide's current support can be attributed
to nostalgia for a past in which life, while difficult
in the Western Hemisphere's poorest country, was
easier than today.
"When Aristide was around we found food, we had jobs,"
said Manouchak Louis, who is 21 and unemployed. "If he
comes back the country will change."
___
Associated Press writers Verena Dobnik in New York,
Jennifer Kay in Miami and Michelle Faul in
Johannesburg, South Africa, contributed to this report.





















